20% Off Dry Cleaning
new york, NY 10019
Ah, the pungent odor, the fermented esprit, the sulfurous insanity of the New York Asian Film Fest! Its a new year for the citys favorite attack of the imported-irrational, and as always, the jejune state of the late-spring/early-summer box office gets a shot in the ass.
Sign up for the Events Newsletter: What's happening in town? From underground club nights to the biggest outdoor festivals, our top picks for the week's best events will always keep you in on the action.
The pulp is especially ripe this year, particularly from Japan, where manga-ness seems to have gone from a national pastime to a mass psychosis. Theres precious little other explanation for Yoshimasa Ishibashis Milocrorze (2010), which begins as a flatulently silly, fluorescent-candy-colored romantic fable but then unapologetically drops one narrative and style for others, indulging in music-video seizures like a Japanese variety show on 78 rpms and evolving into a parody of samurai romanticism, including a sword battle through a brothel that is equal parts hyper-bullet-time and Buster Keaton slapstick. In the end, you tell me.
The retro-farce Karate-Robo Zaborgar(2011), reincarnating a 70s TV kiddie series that helped foment the Power Rangers aesthetic, is just as willfully cockeyed and just as inappropriate for little kids, but the minions of Tarantino will hardly be able to resist a movie with both a Diarrhea Robot (!) and a Bulldog Car Robot (!). The frothy, clichéd Ninja Kids(2010) and A Boy and His Samurai (2010) are actually suitable for tykes, and tykes only, while Yasuomi Ishitos Buddha (2011), proudly adapted from a comic by manga-Dickens Osamu Tezuka, tells the Siddhartha story in a spirited bid for Miyazaki greatness, with a lot more Gladiator-style hand-to-hand than Hermann Hesse ever had in mind.
Eiji Uchidas The Last Days of the World (2010) begins as yet another disaffected teenage quasi-comedy, but then takes flight as the dead-eyed kid in question grabs a girl, steals a car, runs over pedestrians, and then runs until he runs out of landall because he has hallucinated an apocalyptic message from a three-inch God. Takahisa Zezes Heavens Story (2010) is another order of caprice and lunacy altogether, a four-hour sprawl of doom, psychopathology, and rue that follows two men (a widower bent on revenge and a semi-disturbed ex-cop working as a hired killer) in the wake of an underage murderer, but the weave of the freewheeling narrative stretches in manymaybe too manydirections. Sometimes crassly staged and shot, it remains the fests most fiery gauntlet.
As for China, Ocean Heaven (2010) is a Rain Man melodrama that gives Jet Li the opportunity to act his age and lets newcomer Zhang Wen go full retard, but stronger is Li Yus Buddha Mountain(2010), a restless, gritty generational-anthem about three lost post-teen friends in Chengdu that delivers on its hyperrealism ambitions and cant take its eye off waif star Fan Bingbing. The Koreans are back, but in more mainstream mode than usual: the wink-wink genital-and-dildo comedy Foxy Festival (2010), the ambivalent-yet-unsubtle Scott Brothersstyle crime thriller The Unjust (2010), and Jang Cheol-soos Bedevilled (2010), a visit to a heinously patriarchal island village where one woman, raped her whole life, finally snaps and righteously takes her sickle to every throat in sight. Strangely, I preferred Anna Lees The Recipe (2010), an utterly sentimental mushfest in which a TV producer compulsively traces the origins of a particular doenjang stew flavor (a famous serial killer was caught intoxicated by it), unfolding stories of love and transcendent salt and cricket-thrummed fermentation.
Only the Thai-kitsch-mad could go for the cheap teen kung-fu actioner Bangkok Knockout (2010); for a guaranteed kick-ass thrall, seek out the Tsui Hark sidebar, featuring the movie that practically invented modern Hong Kong: Zu Warriors From the Magic Mountain (1983). But as you mayve heard, Malaysia is where the shits happening now, as evidenced by the fresh sprout of modernism in Yeo Joon Hans marvelicious Sell Out! (2008), a ceaselessly inventive excoriation of modern industry and reality-show media that begins on a TV interview with the boring director of popularly boring Asian art films, trips through a thorough rip of Dilbert-style corporate Catch-22s, and very often bursts into infectious song (Mone-e-ey! Why dont you like poor people?). Malaysias first Manglish so-called musical! is how the fest tagline puts it, but its also a loose, rich, beguiling, sometimes sophomoric Godardian triumph, and deserves a distributor with walnuts to take it on the road in this country.
What's happening in town? From underground club nights to the biggest outdoor festivals, our top picks for the week's best events will always keep you in on the action.
That whole thing is wild. You know what else is nuts?
I like the tagline sayin' "As Nuts As Ever"! Lol. Yes, it's about to start.
Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...
Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...
More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience
Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info
Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips
Log in or Sign up
Social Connect:Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.
Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:
Sign Up or Log in
Social Connect:Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.
Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:
